How to quickly extract domain names from URLs in Excel

A few tips and pieces of advice will help you get domain names from a list of URLs using Excel formulas. Two variations of the formula let you extract the domain names with and without www. regardless of the URL protocol (http, https, ftp etc. are supported). The solution works in all modern versions of Excel, from 2010 through 2016.

If you are concerned with promoting your web-site (like I am) or doing SEO at the professional level promoting clients' web-sites for money, you often have to process and analyze huge lists of URLs: Google Analytics reports on traffic acquisition, Webmaster tools reports on new links, reports on backlinks to your competitors' web-sites (which do contain a great lot of interesting facts ;) ) and so on, and so forth.

To process such lists, from ten to a million links, Microsoft Excel makes an ideal tool. It is powerful, agile, extendable, and lets you send a report to your client directly from an Excel sheet.

"Why is it this range, from 10 to 1,000,000?" you may ask me. Because you definitely don't need a tool to process fewer than 10 links; and you will hardly need any if you have over a million inbound links. I'd wager that in this case you'd already had some custom software developed especially for you, with a business logic specifically tailored for your needs. And it would be me who would peruse your articles and not the other way round :)

When analyzing a list of URLs, you often need to perform the following tasks: get domain names for further processing, group URLs by domain, remove links from already processed domains, compare and merge two tables by domain names etc.

5 easy steps to extract domain names from the list of URLs

As an example, let's take a snippet of ablebits.com's backlinks report generated by Google Webmaster Tools.

Tip: I'd recommend using ahrefs.com to timely spot new links to your own site and your competitors' web-sites.

Add the "Domain" column to the end of your table.

We have exported the data from a CSV file, which is why in terms of Excel our data are in a simple range. Press Ctrl + T to convert them to an Excel table because it is far more convenient to work with.

In the first cell of the "Domain" column (B2), enter the formula to extract a domain name:

Extract the domain with www. if it is present in a URL:=MID(A2,FIND(":",A2,4)+3,FIND("/",A2,9)-FIND(":",A2,4)-3)

Omit www. and get a pure domain name:=IF(ISERROR(FIND("//www.",A2)), MID(A2,FIND(":",A2,4)+3,FIND("/",A2,9)-FIND(":",A2,4)-3), MID(A2,FIND(":",A2,4)+7,FIND("/",A2,9)-FIND(":",A2,4)-7))

The second formula may seem too long and complex, but only if you didn't see truly long formulas. It's not without reason that Microsoft has increased the maximum length of formulas up to 8192 characters in new versions of Excel :)

The good thing is that we don't have to use either an additional column or VBA macro. In fact, using VBA macros to automate your Excel tasks is not so difficult as it may seem, see a very good article - Tutorial with Excel examples about Macros. But in this particular case, we do not actually need them, it's quicker and easier to go with a formula.

Note: Technically, www is the 3rd level domain, though with all normal web-sites www. is just an alias of the primary domain. In the early days of the Internet, you could say "double u, double u, double u our cool name dot com" on the phone or in a radio advert, and everyone perfectly understood and remembered where to look for you, of course unless your coolname was http://www.llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyll-llantysiliogogogoch.com/ :)

You need to leave all other domain names of the 3rd level, otherwise you would mess up links from different sites, e.g. with "co.uk" domain or from different accounts on blogspot.com etc.

Since we have a full-fledged table, Excel automatically copies the formula across all cells in the column.

Done! We have a column with extracted domain names.

In the next section you will learn how you can process a list of URLs based on the Domain column.

Tip: If you may need to edit the domain names manually at a later time or copy the results to another Excel worksheet, replace the formula results with values. To do this, proceed with the following steps:

Click on any cell in the Domain column and press Ctrl+Space to select all the cells in that column.

Press Ctrl + C to copy the data to Clipboard, then go to the Home tab, click the "Paste" button and select "Value" from the drop-down menu.

Processing a list of URLs using the Domain name column

Here you will find a few tips on further processing of the URL list, from on my own experience.

Group URLs by domain

Click on any cell in the Domain column.

Sort your table by Domain: go to the Data tab and click on the A-Z button.

Convert your table back to a range: click on any cell in the table, go to the Design tab and click the "Convert to the range" button.

Go to the Data tab and click the "Subtotal" icon.

In the "Subtotal" dialog box, select the following options: At each change in: "Domain" use function Count and Add subtotal to Domain.

Click OK.

Excel has created an outline of your data on the left hand side of the screen. There are 3 levels of the outline and what you see now is the expanded view, or level 3 view. Click number 2 in the upper left hand corner to display the final data by domains, and then you can click the plus and minus signs (+ / -) in order to expand / collapse the details for each domain.

Highlight the second and all subsequent URLs in the same domain

In our previous section we showed how to group URLs by domain. Instead of grouping, you can quickly color duplicate entries of the same domain name in your URLs.

Compare your URLs from different tables by domain column

You may have one or several separate Excel worksheets where you keep a list of domain names. Your tables may contain links that you don't want to work with, like spam or the domains you already processed. You may also need to keep a list of domains with interesting links and delete all other ones.

For example, my task is to color in red all domains that are in my spammer blacklist:

The best way is to merge two tables by domain name

This is the most advanced way and the one I personally prefer.

Suppose, you have a separate Excel worksheet with reference data for each domain you ever worked with. This workbook keeps webmaster contacts for link exchange and the date when your website was mentioned in this domain. There can also be types/subtypes of websites and a separate column with your comments like on the screenshot below.

As soon as you get a new list of links you can match two tables by domain name and merge the information from the domain lookup table and your new URLs sheet in just two minutes.

As a result you will get the domain name as well as the website category and your comments. This will let you see the URLs from the list you need to delete and those you need to process.

This nifty tool will match and merge two Excel 2013-2003 worksheets in a flash. You can use one or several columns as the unique identifier, update existing columns in the master worksheet or add new from the lookup table. Feel free to read more about Merge Tables Wizard on our website.

If you are interested to get a free add-in for extracting domain names and subfolders of the root domain (.com, .edu, .us etc.) from the URL list, simply drop us a comment. When doing this, please specify your Excel version, e.g. Excel 2010 64-bit, and enter your email address in the corresponding field (do not worry, it won't be displayed publically). If we have a decent number of votes, we will create such and add-in and I let you know. Thank you in advance!

For spanish speakers how to extract in spanish excel:
=SI(ESERROR(HALLAR("//www.";A2)); EXTRAE(A2;HALLAR(":";A2;4)+3;HALLAR("/";A2;9)-HALLAR(":";A2;4)-3); EXTRAE(A2;HALLAR(":";A2;4)+7;HALLAR("/";A2;9)-HALLAR(":";A2;4)-7))

This one is compact and good but not sufficient for my needs. We have URLs in as good as every possible (and impossible) format. We have URLs with protocol, without protocol, including www, excluding it, already exist of only the domain, exist of only domain and location, includes parameters and so on. I think you get the point.

One example would be "1und1.de/index.php?page=platin_umetz"
This is a very common format of URLs we have as data.

This is the one I made for myself: (Requires a table with a column named Website (Insert > Table))
=LEFT(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE([@Website];"www.";"");"http://";"");"https://";"");IFERROR(FIND("/";SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE([@Website];"www.";"");"http://";"");"https://";""))-1;LEN(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE([@Website];"www.";"");"http://";"");"https://";""))))

If you find some URL that does not work with this formula, please let me know. We can still refine this further.

How to remove .com in last of the company name in is Formula =IF(ISERROR(FIND("//www.",A2)), MID(A2,FIND(":",A2,4)+3,FIND("/",A2,9)-FIND(":",A2,4)-3), MID(A2,FIND(":",A2,4)+7,FIND("/",A2,9)-FIND(":",A2,4)-7))

How to remove .com in last of the company name in this Formula =IF(ISERROR(FIND("//www.",A2)), MID(A2,FIND(":",A2,4)+3,FIND("/",A2,9)-FIND(":",A2,4)-3), MID(A2,FIND(":",A2,4)+7,FIND("/",A2,9)-FIND(":",A2,4)-7))

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